EC 110 Study Guide - Final Guide: Coase Theorem, Demand Curve, Economic Equilibrium

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In the presence of a positive externality, the social value of the good exceeds the private value. Shifts the demand curve to the right: negative externality: if the impact of the externality on the bystander is adverse. In the presence of a negative externality, such as pollution, the social cost of the good exceeds the private cost. Shifts the supply curve to the left. Social cost: includes the private costs plus the costs to those bystanders affected by the externality. Example: corrective taxes and government subsidies: market-based policies: government response to externalities in which they provide incentives so that private decision makers will choose to solve the problem on their own. Corrective taxes: taxes enacted to deal with the effects of negative externalities (aka pigovian taxes): the ideal corrective tax = external cost. Private solutions to externalities: moral codes and social sanctions, charities, contracts between market participants and the affected bystanders.

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